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Language acquisition in relation to developmental dyslexia
Cross-linguistic perspectives Lynne Duncan University of Dundee, UK
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Brain regions involved in reading
Typical readers Dyslexic readers Paulesu et al (2014)
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Cross-linguistic approach to early reading acquisition
Variation in spoken language written language educational approach
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Understanding early reading
Meaning Written language Spoken language decoding units? availability? consistency? Psycholinguistic Grain Size Theory (Ziegler & Goswami, 2005)
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Early reading acquisition
educational differences age of starting to read teaching methods spoken language differences syllable complexity written language differences decoding depth
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First language variation
Spoken Language Syllables Simple CV syllables Few consonant clusters Complex CVC syllables Many consonant clusters Written Language Decoding depth Shallow 1 letter-1 phoneme Consistent correspondences Deep many letters–1 phoneme Inconsistent correspondences Contextual & morphological influences
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European languages Syllables Decoding Depth Shallow Deep Simple
Finnish Spanish Greek Portuguese French Complex Norwegian Swedish Icelandic Danish English Duncan et al (2013) Cognition
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Co-authors Philip Seymour & Sheila Baillie
University of Dundee, UK Jacqueline Leybaert, Phillippe Mousty & Nathalie Genard Free University of Brussels, Belgium Carsten Elbro & Holger Juul University of Copenhagen, Denmark Costas Porpodas & Menelaos Sarris University of Patras, Greece Rannveig Lund, Baldur Sigurðsson & Anna S. Þráinsdóttir Reykjavik Academy & University of Education, Iceland São Luís Castro & Ana Sucena University of Porto, Portugal Sylvia Defior & Francisca Serrano University of Granada, Spain
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Participants N Age English 55 5;4 French 20 6;6 Greek 50 6;3 Icelandic
33 6;2 Portuguese 22 Spanish 62
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Tasks at beginning and end of first year
Letter knowledge Word reading Pseudoword reading Phonological awareness English, Icelandic and French words had 1 or 2 syllables, and Greek, Portuguese and Spanish words had 2 or 3 syllables.
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Spoken language differences
Duncan et al (2013)
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Same-different matching
Do these sound the same? marble-market panther-bandage penguin-padlock syllable rime phoneme garden-biscuit
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Common unit identification
Which sound is the same in….? marble-market cobweb-lobster biscuit-bandage syllable rime phoneme
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Beginning of learning to read
syllable rime phoneme syllable rime phoneme Same-different matching Common unit identification
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After 1 year of learning to read
Common Unit Identification syllable rime phoneme
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Educational differences
Belgian data
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Whole-word vs. phonics instruction
Common Unit Identification syllable rime phoneme
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Written language differences
English & Icelandic data
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Letter knowledge
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Letters & reading words
English
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Letters & reading words
Icelandic
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Letters & reading pseudowords
English
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Cross-language comparison simple vs complex words
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Complexity effect for words at end of year 1
Language % Difference Finnish 1.76 Greek 6.04 Spanish 4.96 French 13.96 Portuguese 12.05 Icelandic English 36.49 16.67
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Tracing the foundations of developmental dyslexia
Duncan, Seymour, Baillie & Gray (2008)
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Lower-case letter knowledge
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Word reading
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Simple words
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Understanding early reading
Meaning Written language Spoken language availability consistency decoding units Psycholinguistic Grain Size Theory (Ziegler & Goswami, 2005)
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Conclusions Developmental sequence in typical and dyslexic reading development is influenced by first language literacy instruction Cross-language comparison of typical acquisition and growth can guide assessment and intervention in dyslexia
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Participating children & staff from schools around Europe
Acknowledgements Participating children & staff from schools around Europe
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